Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regiment - A colour photo of the members of the Old Comrades' Associations of the Royal Berkshire Regiment, the Wiltshire Regiment and the DERR on the occasion of a visit to the 1st Bn, Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regiment, 17th-20th July 1980, at Osnabruck in West Germany, in the presence of the Colonel in Chief, HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh - 3 copies

4th Bn, Wiltshire Regiment - A black and white photo of WO2 H J Alexander, Lieutenant (QM) T H Wheeler and Sergeant E R Muspratt in front of the memorial to the Battalion on Hill 112 near Maillot in Normandy where, in April 1962, they had just laid a wreath in memory of the members of the Battalion who died in that Battle in August 1944

4th Bn, Wiltshire Regiment - A black and white photo of the Officers at Annual Camp at Oakhampton in Devon in 1966; this was the last Camp for the Battalion before it was disbanded. Photographer; Braetar Studios, Red Lion Yard, Okehampton

1st/4th Bn, Wiltshire Regiment - A sepia photograph of a group (back row left to right) Privates Bridgeman, Hedges, Wheeler, Hunt, (front row) L/Corporal Clarke, Sergeant Carter, L/Corporal Haysome, taken in India on August 20th 1916 - they are all from the GWR Stores Department in Swindon

1st Bn, Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment - A black and white photograph of the Regimental Band taken on 27th April 1994 in Alma Barracks, Catterick, Yorkshire. The photograph was taken shortly after the amalgamation of the Gloucestershire Regiment (28th/61st) and the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regiment (49th, 62nd, 66th & 99th)

2nd Bn, Royal Berkshire Regiment - A black and white photocopy of a photograph of the Machine Gun section at Jhansi in India in June 1913. Standing Left to Right are Privates Hignell, Boshier, Odey, Fawcett, Pocock, Dean. (Sitting Left to Right) Privates Cooling, Saunders, Baigent, Sergeant Hancock, Lieutenant Nugent, L/Corporal Vaughan, Privates Haynes, Bailey, Wheeler. All Infantry battalions, prior to the 1st World War, were equipped with two machine guns. After the outbreak of war in 1914, when the full enormity of the threat became apparent, the machine gun capability was substantially increased, leading to the formation of the Machine Gun Corps, with many of the Battalion?s machine gunners transferring into that unit.

4th Bn, Wiltshire Regiment - A digital image taken from slides (Object 26403) of three officers of the Battalion, Captain Tom Wheeler, Captain B Leece and Captain L Walker, probably around July 1966 while the Battalion was on annual camp at Okehampton